I'm far from confident about this but running Ubuntu's installer on my
machine finally allowed me to boot from a GPT partitioned disk. Not
immediately because the installer crashed and although it wiped my EFI
system partition, it didn't get around to putting anything else in it
afterwards. And even when I copied my backup back, the UUIDs didn't
match thus causing trouble for my intact install of linux. But at least
I could get to a grub prompt after copying my backed up ESP back. That
was a huge improvement. And after fixing the UUID, I have a working
installation of linux. (Not of Ubuntu, obviously.)

As far as I can tell, the only thing Ubuntu's installer did which I
didn't do was to use fat16 rather than fat32 to format the partition. I
am almost certain that my machine would have remained unbootable if it
had used fat32.

I found a reference in bug #769669 to a minimum size for the fat32
partition of 256M. That might explain why my machine was not booting. My
EFI partition is only 202M. But if that is why, the installer should
also insist on a partition which meets that requirement if it switches
to fat32 for the EFI partition.

My machine has Phoenix SecureCore Tiano firmware. Version 1.14.

Reference: https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?pid=1024473#p1024473

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/811485

Title:
  EFI SYSTEM PARTITION should be atleast 100 MiB size and formatted as
  FAT32, not FAT16

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